Wobble Effect of Moon

    0
    266

    In News

    According to a recent study, the Wobble effect of the Moon is expected to lead to more flooding on Earth in the middle of the next decade.

    Key Finding of Study:

    • The study aimed to untangle all of those variables in an effort to improve predictions about the future of floods.
    • Rising temperatures caused by greenhouse gas emissions are not the only cause of higher flood risks and the interplay of many variables that push and pull at ocean levels is also responsible.
    • The study warned the wobble to heighten high tides in the middle of the 2030s, but it also showed that this prediction does not apply uniformly to every coastline everywhere.

     Moon Wobble

    • It is a regular oscillation that humans have known about for centuries.
    • It is one of many factors that can either exacerbate rising sea levels or counteract them, alongside other variables like weather and geography.
    • It was first documented way back in 1728.
    • The wobble takes over an 18.6-year period to complete and continues in a cyclic fashion.

    Cause:

    • The high tides are caused mostly by the pull of the moon’s gravity on a spinning Earth and on most beaches, causing two high tides every 24 hours.
    • The moon also revolves around the Earth about once a month, and that orbit is a little bit tilted.
    • The path of the moon’s orbit seems to fluctuate over time, completing a full cycle (referred to as a nodal cycle) every 18.6 years.
    • At certain points along the cycle, the moon’s gravitational pull comes from such an angle that it yanks one of the day’s two high tides a little bit higher, at the expense of the other.
    • It does not mean that the moon itself is wobbling, nor that its gravity is necessarily pulling at our oceans any more or less than usual.
    • The high tide flooding related to climate change is expected to break records with increasing frequency over the next decade.

    Effects of wobble:

    • It could cause high tide levels at a beach to oscillate by 1 or 2 inches over the course of its long cycle.
    • In half of this lunar cycle, Earth’s regular daily tides are diminished, with high tides lower than usual and low tides higher than usual.
    • In the cycle’s other half, the situation is reversed, with high tides higher and low tides lower.
    • The moon wobbles impact the gravitational pull of the moon, and therefore, indirectly influences the ebb and flow of tides here on the Earth.
    • The lunar cycle is expected to shift again by mid-2030, and in the coming phase, the tides will amplify once again.

    Source: IE